How affirmative action works in practice
Legacy admissions and athletes also get a big boost
In a typical year Harvard, a $53bn endowment with a university attached, receives nearly four times as many candidates with perfect grade-point averages as it has places available. It distinguishes between these well-qualified candidates using four criteria: academic achievement, extra-curricular activities, personal qualities and athletic abilities. Admissions officers also need to keep that endowment growing, which means admitting the children of alumni and of big donors. And they strive to create a racially diverse class. The process is opaque but goes by a soothing name: holistic admissions.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Holistic cow”
United States November 5th 2022
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- The life and death of California Republicanism
- The Supreme Court seems ready to toss out affirmative action
- How affirmative action works in practice
- Obamacare’s slow victory
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- What Democrats can learn from the midterm campaigns
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